AltWeeklies Wire
What If the 'Big One' Is A Bomb?
A RAND report examines a nuclear attack scenario at port of Long Beach.
Random Lengths News |
Paul Rosenberg |
09-15-2006 |
Politics
The ABCs Of 9/11
Disney's TV network errs, blames Clinton.
Random Lengths News |
Paul Rosenberg |
09-15-2006 |
Media
Tags: media
A Commentary on Genre
While sleekly presented in an avant noir style, each vignette is a superb niche in the ten main genres commonly placed on the video shelf, reflecting as the artist insists on something similar to the ten Aristotelian categories of reality.
Random Lengths News |
Armando Ruiz and James Preston Allen |
09-15-2006 |
Art
Tags: visual arts
ABC of Propaganda
When Saigon fell, the US military vowed to never let this kind of war happen again, which many of us took to mean that they were never going to be used as a political pawn in an unjustified war with no exit strategy.
Random Lengths News |
James Preston Allen |
09-15-2006 |
Commentary
Gifted-Class Malaisenew
This film's thoroughly bland characters are living thoroughly empty lives in thoroughly generic environs (the set decoration -- Naguib Mahfouz book here, Apple laptop there -- is subtly sinister in its glib "hipness").
Orlando Weekly |
Jason Ferguson |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: The Last Kiss, Tony Goldwyn
Jackie Chan Passes the Torchnew
With The Protector, 30-year-old martial-arts mastermind Tony Jaa bests his own sensational Ong-Bak: The Thai Warrior, the 2003 film that brought the fearless fighter Western recognition.
Orlando Weekly |
John Thomason |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Prachya Pinkaew, The Protector
Two New Neo-Noirsnew
We compare and contrast The Black Dahlia and Hollywoodland.
Orlando Weekly |
John Thomason |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Real-Life Dramanew
Nominated for the Jury Grand Prize at Sundance, this well-researched documentary fills you with frustration beyond measure, as a young black man is sent to prison for life for the brutal rape and murder of a white woman that he did not commit.
Orlando Weekly |
Lindy T. Shepherd |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Brooklyn's Black Cowboysnew
The rough documentary footage captures the street life and bustling interstates that surround Cedar Lane Stables in the tough Howard Beach area of the borough.
Orlando Weekly |
Lindy T. Shepherd |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Hiroshima, Through Survivors' Eyesnew
This harrowing documentary about the atomic bombing of Nagasaki tells its story through the eyes a few of the remaining survivors.
Orlando Weekly |
Jason Ferguson |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Save the Turtlesnew
Richard Ogust was eating at a restaurant in Chinatown when he purchased his first turtle -- it was bound for his plate, but he took it home alive instead.
Orlando Weekly |
Bob Whitby |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
The American Road Movie, in Frenchnew
Simultaneously mysterious and mundane, the debut film from French-Moroccan director Ismael Ferroukhi holds up a mirror to the American road movie.
Orlando Weekly |
Jessica Bryce Young |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Ismael Ferroukhi, Le Grand Voyage
Stay in Debtnew
Hey kids, need another lecture on the evils of credit cards, complete with funny 60s-era footage of fresh-faced young'uns learning how to spend responsibly? Have we got the movie for you!
Orlando Weekly |
Bob Whitby |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Dizzingly Didacticnew
This film is from Tollywood, and therefore is capable of that peculiar feat of weaving a couple of choreographed numbers into a tale about Sri Lankan terrorism, guerrilla warfare, refugees' identity crises, adoption and heart-wrenching separations.
Orlando Weekly |
Jason Ferguson |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: A Peck on the Cheek, Mani Ratnam
Transcending Violence Through Artnew
Roving from one miserable refugee camp to another in the Republic of Guinea, a group of musicians transcends the horror of murder, mutilation and destruction through their art, which sounds like roots reggae.
Orlando Weekly |
Lindy T. Shepherd |
09-15-2006 |
Reviews